Kenyan High Court overrules government on Dadaab refugee camp closure

Kenya’s High Court has declared “null and void” the government’s decision to close the Dadaab refugee camp. The 260,000 Somali refugees will now not be sent home.

Judge John Mativo ruled on Thursday that the closure of the camp – the world’s largest – had been ordered “without proper consultation” with the people affected, adding that it was “in violation of the constitutional right to fair legal proceedings.”

Mativo said the Kenyan government had not proved Somalia was safe for the refugees to return. “Hence the said decision is null and void,” he ruled.

Dadaab’s closure would have left about 260,000 Somali refugees with nowhere else to go.

Dadaab was opened in 1991 as a temporary shelter for people fleeing civil war in neighboring Somalia. Since sending troops into Somalia in 2011, Kenya has come under repeated attacks from the al-Shabab armed group, and Nairobi has claimed that the Dadaab camp acts as “a terrorist training ground” for al-Shabab fighters.

Amnesty praises the ruling

“Today is a historic day for more than a quarter of a million refugees who were at risk of being forcefully returned to Somalia, where they would have been at serious risk of human rights abuses,” Muthoni Wanyeki, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes, wrote in a statement.

“This ruling reaffirms Kenya’s constitutional and international legal obligation to protect people who seek safety from harm and persecution,” Wanyeki wrote.